Newspapers / The Kinston Free Press … / Sept. 18, 1914, edition 1 / Page 3
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Millinery Opening . TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY AN(f THURSDAY " September 22, 23 and 24. THE PUBLIC IS COR DIALLY INVITED. Chamberlain & Braxton Caswell Building r WANT ADS 1 CENT A WORD EACH IN SERTION MINIMUM 15 CENTS Young Native Beef at Stricklin's Market. y-18-lt-dly Extra Fine Stall Feed Beef at P. A. Hooker's Market. 9-18-2t-(iTy WANTED Two experienced salesla dies. M. Adler & Sons. 9-15- dly tf Morehead and Norfolk Oysters daily at Davis' Market. Phone 194. 9-17-3tdly Pork and Hog Brains at P. A. Hook er's Market. 9-18-2t-dly LOST Cameo Tie Clasp. Reward for return to this office. 9-18-2t-dly FOR SALE Quick, at a bargain, my Shoe Store and Fixtures. J. D. Pop lin, Royal Blue Store. t 9-15-tod-3t , 9-19-sw FLOWER BULBS New Lot just re ceived. J. E. Hood k Co.- i 9-14-6t dly FOR SALE Old Papers in 5c pack ages. Good for underlaying car pets, packing or wrapping purposes. Free .Press. a-i-u FOR SALE Old Papers, suitable for kindling fires these cool mornings, 5c a package. Free Press. 9-14-tf PHONE Subscribers will please note change of our number if ran 234-J to No. 10. John G. Cox Shoe Store. 9-18-lt-flly FOR SALE Cottrell newspaper press and Dexter folder. Will print and fold 4 or 8 pages, 6 columns. A bargain. Address Free Press,- Kin ston, N. C. " 9-14-tf This is the time to have your sioves put in readiness for the winter. My business is tobacco flues, mill piping, tin and slate roofing, awnings, plumb ing and general repair work. R. E. L. Rhodes, 110 West North Street, Phone 498. , " 9-11 to 18 dly LOST Between city limits and tv. C. Dupree'B gin house on Central Highway, on Sept. 16., one Collie Puppy. Finder will please notify Thomas Harvey and receive reward. 9-17-6t-dly 9-12-2t-sw SOFT, FLUFFY HAIR AIDS BEAUTY AND PERSONALITY. Girls and women of all ages want to be charming, beautiful and attract iveit's their birthright but stringy, thin -and lifeless hair destroys half the beauty of a pretty face. - If your hair is not beautiful, is fall ing out, streaky, full of dandruff, too dry, or if the scalp itches ane Burns, use Parisian Sage. Rub it well into the scalp. It will go right to the hair roots, nourish them, and stimulate the hair to grow strong and luxuri ant. Parisian Sage removes ' dand ruff with one application, cools and invigorates the scalp and maxes the hair doubly beautiful. : , , r Parisian- Sage is a scientifically made preparation that gives the hair just what is needed to make it soft, fluffy, thick and ' gloriously 1 radiant. It is inexpensive,' and ean fee had from any druggist or from J. E. Hood A Co, or at any drug store, (advt.) V Whek You Want Quick ;;- ; v Relief Prop . ' v,. ; (.r Colds," Croup,, Ppeu-L : mo&a Pain or Fever, - Aik YMiti&iit"rafrni lDcnt czy "Pnsiinr.cr.ia Cclvo" Ask fsrGowzns end 'Cct what ycu czh SOCIAL: . And f PERSONAL Mr. Edgar Wt; Hargett is in Dur ham on business. ' tt'H'K Mr. Glenn C. Walter of Washing ton spent today here. i w i: Mr. Orin Weeks has been spend ing a few days in Morehead City. a a Miss Edna Letha Hargett left Wed nesday for Greensboro, to enter the State Normal College. a :s Mr. R. A. G. Barnes, traveling agent of the A. C. L. Railroad, was a Kinston visitor today. . . - The firms of Barrett & HartsfieL, Chamberlain & Braxton and J. M. Stephenson will have their fall milli nery openings next Tuesday. A. M. Waddell Chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy, will meet tomor row afternoon at 4 o'clock, at the home of Mrs. G. H. Herring. . , i . . , Miss Jessie Wingate, one of the teachers in the public schools,., was summoned to her home in Rock. Hill, S. C, Thursday night on account of the serious illness of her mother. The message was received just as the night train for Goldsboro blew for the station, and with the assistance of Mr. and Mrs. K. R. Tunstall, with whom she boarded, and other friends, Miss Wingate was rushed to the sta tion in time to catch the train. Mr. Tunstall had preceded the young la dy and gotten the conductor to hold the train for a few minutes. State Superintendent of Education J. Y. Joyner and his son, Mr. W. T. Joyner, of Raleigh, spent Thursday night in the city, the guests of Mr and Mrs. N. J. Rouse. The younger Mr. Joyner is a nephew of Mrs Rouse, and came down for a short vis it before leaving next week to re sume his law studies at Harvard Unl' versity. Superintendent Joyner was on his way home from holding jan -jn stitute in Rocky Mount. They both left on the morning train for La Grange to visit other relatives and" from there they return to Raleigh. New Orleans Paper Criticise. "The New Orleans newspapers are still at war with the Era Club, and if not so bloody as the European war it is none the less wordy. The New Or leans papers have been sparring for an opening to declare war against the Era Club, and especially against the Misses Gordon for several years. Some time ago Miss Jean Gordon, in the exercise of her duties as factory inspector, found it necessary to com pel one of the dailies to not only sani tary up, but to comply with the child labor laws, which it was violating. This added to the antagonism of the papers, and when the mule-eared pen cil pusher for the Times-Picayune glued himself to the key hole of the Club room and reported the proceed ings of their executive session, the psychological moment was thought to have arrived for opening the ball. There 1S no more potent factor jn the fight for a cleaner and better New Orleans than the Era Club; and there are no members of the Era Club that have done more or worked harder for the moral uplift of the City than the Misses Gordon. The member of the Era Club who presented the resolu tion of sympathy made a mistake and the Club may have made a mistake in not indorsing the resolution after it was presented, but the New Orleans papers have made the greatest mis take in using this mistake as an op ening to precipitate the fight they have been so long itching for. The Item says, (Aug 26: "It is the deed the Era Club has done not the persons who did it that the Item criticises." This veil is too thin to disguise the motive that, lurks be hind it; and certainly no disinterested person can believe the Item is wast ing its. entire vocabulary in attacking a deed that Was of no possible impor tance to the . public and of but little importance to ' the membership, of the Era Club.; If the Item were, in sym pathy with the work of the Era Club it would endeavor to shield it from the results of its; mistakes, , rather than hold it up td censure and ridicule.- Lake Arthur ! fieraldV ,Lak Arthur, La. :v .Work In Kentucky. Organization wori in ,' Kentucky is proceeding vigorously by ifluiTragts, ! anil twentv-thre fionntiea were Visited ! in gwb week-K uitfar splfrxlii Jesuits by ' scriptions nd cpntrihntion v fo-the. seven campaign JStates are tying xt-.. Cgivedby Mrs. Deska. Breckennege : u mi a. ron' jry. I till FOR FLETCHER 5 , a t -p r r f a RIK RITflV TFNnKR IVY - : SHUT IN AT LOOKOUT Morehead City, Sept. 18. Weather bound in the Sound on the inside from Cape Look out is the buoy Under Ivy, of the United States Lighthouse ser vice. The Ivy is the largest ship in that service, being about 200 feet in length and carrying a crew of twenty-seven men. The tender, equipped for ocean work, carries four large buoys, one of them a big Bell floater. She is awaiting the clearing away of the bad weather at sea. HARD TO PICK WINNER IN NATIONAL LEAGUE. The Most Interesting Race the Senior Major League Has Staged for Many Years, Is Drawing . ' to a Close. (By Hal Sheridan For United Press.) ' It will be many a year, in . all like lihood, before such a race as. is being staged in the National League this season will be duplicated. The teams are now in the stretch, there being on ly two weeks more to go and as yet picking the winner is a precarious occupation. There is no doubt but what Mana ger John McGraw of the Giants play ed a trump card when he annexed Marty OToole of $22,500 fame, from the Pirates. With the laj,ter club, this red-topped spitball artist was a failure due to a great many things With the Giants he is more than apt to prove one of the best pitchers the game has ever seen. That old reserve strength tells the tale. Without it no winner can go over be it horse, man or machine. This was never better illustrated than in the hot race in the National League. The Giants and Braves have that thing called reserve strength that something to fall back upon when a tight place is reached. In the case of the Giants Christy Mathewson is largely the team's reserve strength. In times of need McGraw always calls upon the Old Master to save him, an'cf it is seldom that the great pitcher doesn't come through with winning colors. At Boston George Stallingsii consti tutes most of the reserve strength. No matter how blue the outlook, the Braves' fighting manager is 'urging his players on to their limit and then some. He never quits and will not tolerate on his club a player who will ever say beaten until the last man is out. The St. Louis Cardinals have made a great showing this year and 'the Mound City fans cried for a pennant. But the reserve strength wasn't there and when they hit the tight places the team blew up. There was noth ing to fall back upon. SALVATIONISTS CANNOT LOCATE BARRACKS. Agents of the Salvation Army, who have been trying to get quarters here for barracks during the past several weeks, declare that they have been unable to find a suitable place, and this may delay the opening of a post of the army in Kinston. Meanwhile this city will remain in the territory of New Bern. ,- The barracks would have' to be large enough for chapel purposes, and conveniently located, Soldiers today are taking subscrip tions here for the Salvationists' mis sion work at large. CARNIVALS BARRED FROM ROCKY MOUNT. Rocky Mount, Sept. 17. No carni vals will be allowed to exhibit in Rocky Mount during the present city administration, according to 'decision reached by Mayor L. F. Tillery and Chief of Police Hedgepeth. War to Bring Votes for Women., The Chicago Journal editorially comments on the pfobfrble effect of the European War on Woman Suff rage. The Journal says: "The loss and suffering which this war is bound to entail will be a powerful argument for peace, and for the entry into poli tics of the sex which can be depended upo nto use its influence for peace. If England emerges from this war vic torious, it would seem almost certain that English women will gain the bal lot. French women are reaping the nations' harvests, doing as much of its factory work as possible, 'keeping the wheel of industry turning" some how," while .their , husbands,, brothers j arid, Sons are' at the front-i Win or lose, ft seems, probable that the cause of political equality is bound" to gain in France from the war." j ' Amendment Action Postponed. f : .B y ' a - vote of - three to firee the Rules Committee of the Hduse post poned Until theTiext sessio 6f .Con-' fressrewwidtff atlbfiTof thel Moposed WoinenljSoffraee AmendmerJ to the Constitution of the United J itesV ; f IChildrtin' J V FOR FLETCHER'S' O A n T O R f A i r Uneeda Biscuit Tempt the appetite, please the taste and nourish the body. Crisp, clean and fresh 5 cents. Baronet Biscuit Round, thin, tender with a delightful flavor appropriate for lunch eon, tea and dinner. 10 cents. N Graham Crackers Made of the finest ingredients. Baked to perfection. The national strength food, zo cents. Buy biscuit baked by HATJONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that Name. KID GLOVES Are The Specials For This Week I ; The Hutchens and Potter Co. ! Well Known Make $1 and $1.25 Each Pair Guaranteed. We are showing Fall Millinery in call the latest creations, , : : is. M. L. Brasvuell NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION. Having heretofore qualified ns ad ministrator, c. t. a., of Kate Brown, deceased, late of Lenoir county, Nortl Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 25th 1 day of August, 1915, or this notico1 will be pleaded in bar of their re-' covery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immedi ate payment. A. C. BROWN, 1 Administrator, c. t. a., of Kate Brown, deceased. August 19, 1914. LOFTIN DAWSON, Attorneys. 8-19, l9i 9-2, 9, 16-23 dly KINSTON AND CAROLINA B. R. .:. AND LUMBER CO., i . YEffective Sent 13. 1914 6:00 A. M.) No. 1 . STATIONS : No. 2 4;00 Lv...... Kinston .....Ar, 8:10 4:10 Lv..:. Jackson .V. :Ar. 7:50 1:20 Lw.-.v. Albritton'e gi.'.Ar. 7:40 U:50 Lr..;'. Sparrow' ;...Ar. 7:20 5:20 Lv..... Lynchburg ....Ar. 7:05 5:30 Ar..... Pink Hill Lv. 7:00 . R, A. HONEYCUTT, Supt. , 1 WM. HAYES, Gen'l Supt. DR. GEO. E. KORNEGAY Specialist in Diseases of Wo men and Children. Office hours 10 to 12. Office 105 E. Caswell Street. Phone 118. Black j" for um v7yjyPnrrT? JJ 'ae' Shoes JzXJ itJm i t o me INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS, 1 REAL ESTATE BOUGHT AND SOLD LOANS NEGOTIATED Now Occupying New Office one Door East of The Post Office. Kinston Insurance & Realty Co. Phone 182 C. Oettingcr, Mgr. I INDUSTRIALSGHQOL& MUSIC ACADEMY I F. 0. NO. 2, KINSTON N.i:C. Fall Term Opens September 22-14. An institution off ording iti pupil a literary education, , musical training in either instrumental or vocal, and a ministerial course. Splendid opportunities are offered young men, who wish to pay! part ol their way in pleasant work. Write for full particulars. J. M. PERRY, General Manager. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF KINSTON W. L. Kennedy H. Tull tH. Canady . C. Moseley J. F. Parrott C. Felix Harvey $8.50 JACKSONVILLE ROUND F0 FROM KINSTON Proportionate Fares From Other Pointspn N. C. Va., and S. C. VIA Atlantic Coast ILBne THE STANDARD RAILROAD OF jTHE SOUTH. TICKETS WILL BE SOLD FOR ALL TRAINS TuoesdlaSepfin 2 LiaHsJ, rttirataf , to rsatl Orifiaal StaritatJPaW Ml later tbaa aWsifkl si Tea. Sept. ii FOR SCHEDULES. RESERVATIONS AND ' INFORMAtlON.' APPLY TO ; ; d. j: frARD Tidet AgenV V . : . ' - ' , ' i ! " ' " Kinston, N. C. ( WsJvCRAicr- '''! A t! c whitKv!: : Paengef Traffic Manager,- ' . . Cenl Pasgenger Agen, WILMINGTON. N. C. ; I ' OFFICE ' AND JISPITAli Telephone 533.. . 3r. J. F. Foley, Veterinarian tn rear of Stroud Bros. jStarf Diseases of all Domestic Animals Treated. A Will Make Loans to Farmers and others on Cotton as Security. OFFICERS N. J. ROUSE. Pre. DR. H. TULL, Vice President. D. F.WOOTEN. Cashier. J. J. BIZZELL, Ass't Cashier, T. W. HEATH, Teller. DIRECTORS. )avid Oettinger -1. E. Moseley . F. Taylor H.H. McCoy S. H. Isler N. J. Rouse f-rz-r $10.50 TRIP TAMPA THE
The Kinston Free Press (Kinston, N.C.)
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Sept. 18, 1914, edition 1
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